Some pics I took Sunday at my nana's place!
She has this beautiful, big countryside house, with a vegetable garden and chicken and fruit trees and a lot of very cool stuff 😊🌺
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Venezuela

seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Finland
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Finland
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from France
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Ecuador
seen from China
seen from China

seen from New Zealand
Some pics I took Sunday at my nana's place!
She has this beautiful, big countryside house, with a vegetable garden and chicken and fruit trees and a lot of very cool stuff 😊🌺
Hexador and Lorde
nice square farmhouse with spacious rooms
Charts show worldwide GE crop fields cover entire size of U.S. & then some
The amount of land currently being used to cultivate genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) is the highest it has ever been throughout the world, according to a new report. Data compiled by the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA), a pro-GMO group whose stated mission is to increase crop productivity and alleviate poverty for resource-poor farmers, reveals that an astounding 420 million acres of land in 28 countries are currently growing GM crops. This amount is six percent higher than the roughly 410 million land acres that harbored GM crops in 2011, according to the report, and the majority of this rapid growth took place in developing countries. In fact, most of the growth in the GM crop sector throughout the past decade or more has taken place in developing countries, where biotechnology corporations apparently see the most profit and growth potential. According to the ISAAA report, if every land acre currently sustaining GM crops was placed right next to each other, it would cover a land mass roughly the size of Alaska. And if all the land acres that have ever grown GMOs since the time they first hit the global market back in 1996 were combined, it would cover a land mass one-and-a-half times larger than the entire United States. "The ISAAA says the area of land devoted to genetically modified crops has ballooned by 100 times since farmers first started growing the crop commercially in 1996," writes Jaeah Lee for Mother Jones. "Over the past 17 years, millions of farmers in 28 countries have planted and replanted GMO crop seeds on a cumulative 3.7 billion acres of land -- an area 50 percent larger than the total land mass of the United States."
My kind of drive-bys.